2015 Beaver Computing Challenge (Grade 7 & 8) Questions · Tommy Beaver was inspired by the picture...
Transcript of 2015 Beaver Computing Challenge (Grade 7 & 8) Questions · Tommy Beaver was inspired by the picture...
2015Beaver
ComputingChallenge
(Grade 7 & 8)
Questions
Part A
2
Favourite Numbers
Billy Beaver writes down his favourite numbers, from smallest to largest when read from left to right.
Story
Which of the following orderings of numbers is the one that Billy Beaver wrote down?
(A) 2 3 4 5 10 31 29
(B) 5123 5148 5171 5149 5189
(C) 3 10 19 24 99 101
(D) 1 100 1000 100000 10000
Question
3
Dream Dress
Kate wants to buy her dream dress. It must
• have short sleeves, and
• have more than 3 buttons, and
• have stars on its sleeves.
Four shops sell only the dresses shown:
Story
Which of these shops sells Kate’s dream dress?
(A) BeaverYorker
(B) Beaver Nova
(C) B & B
(D) Tom Teaver
Question
4
Chestnut Animals
Tommy Beaver was inspired by the picture of an animal madefrom nuts (shown to the right), and created 4 animals by him-self using chestnuts, strings and glue (shown below):
Starfish Dog Sea lion Giraffe
His sister plays with these animals by moving the chestnuts around without breaking any connections.This makes it hard to recognize which shapes correspond to which animals.
Story
Which animal was the following shape before Tommy Beaver’s sister played with it?
(A) Starfish
(B) Dog
(C) Sea lion
(D) Giraffe
Question
5
Car Transportation
A new red car comes from a manufacturing line every 7 minutes. A new yellow car comes from anothermanufacturing line every 5 minutes. Both manufacturing lines start working at the same time.A driver parks the cars on the back of a large transport truck in the order the cars leave their respectivemanufacturing lines. The top floor of the transport truck is loaded first.
Story
What will the large transport truck look like after loading?
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
Question
6
QB-Code
Beavers want to encode numbers for keeping track of how many trees theyhave chewed down. Therefore they developed the Quick-Beaver-Code(QB-Code). This is a graphical code consisting of nine 1 × 1 squaresarranged into a 3 × 3 square. Every square has a certain value. Thesquares are filled line by line from the bottom to the top, from right toleft. The next square has double the value of the square before. In theexample, you see the values of the first five squares.
To encode a number, the beavers darken some squares. The number encoded is the sum of the valuesof the dark squares.For example, the number encoded in this QB-Code is 17:
Story
Which of the following encodes the largest number?
(A) (B) (C) (D)
Question
7
Part B
8
Collecting Pollen
Beever the bee flies to a field of flowers to collect pollen. Oneach flight, he visits only one flower and can collect up to 10 mgof pollen. He may return to the same flower more than once.
The initial amount of pollen in each flower (in mg) is shown below.
Story
What is the maximum total amount of pollen that Beever can collect in 20 flights?
(A) 179 mg
(B) 195 mg
(C) 196 mg
(D) 200 mg
Question
9
Cross-Country
Three competitive runners will compete in a cross-country race.
When running uphill, Mr. Brown will overtake one beaver.
When running downhill, Mrs. Pink will overtake one beaver.
When running over rocks, Mrs. Green will overtake one beaver.
The terrain is as shown in the picture: uphill, followed by some rocks, downhill and then again somerocks. Mrs. Pink starts in the first position, followed next by Mr. Brown and finally by Mrs. Green.
Story
In which order will they finish the race?
(A) Mrs. Pink, Mr. Brown, Mrs. Green
(B) Mr. Brown, Mrs. Green, Mrs. Pink
(C) Mrs. Green, Mrs. Pink, Mr. Brown
(D) Mr. Brown, Mrs. Pink, Mrs. Green
Question
10
Mistakes
Three kinds of buttons control a robot:
Button Description
robot turns left
robot turns right
robot moves X units in the direction it is facing
The robot starts at the blue star facing east. John presses the seven buttons shown (from left to right)to try and move the robot to the red diamond. Unfortunately, he presses two extra buttons by mistake.
Story
Which two button presses should be removed so that the robot ends at the correct location?
(A) the 1st and the 2nd
(B) the 1st and the 4th
(C) the 3rd and the 4th
(D) the 2nd and the 6th
Question
11
Irrigation System
Beavers have created a nifty irrigation system for their fields. The water flows from a lake at the top ofthe hill all the way down to the fields numbered 1 to 6 at the bottom.Along the water canals, the beavers have installed four water gates A to D, where the water can onlyflow either to the left ( ) or to the right( ). An example showing how these may be set to have thewater flow to fields 1, 2, 5 and 6 is shown below.
Story
What is the correct configuration for the water gates to irrigate only fields 2, 4, 5 and 6?
(A) A: B: C: D:
(B) A: B: C: D:
(C) A: B: C: D:
(D) A: B: C: D:
Question
12
Dogs versus Beavers
Beavers and dogs compete. The nine participants scored the following points: 1, 2, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6, 7.
We know that no dog scored more than any beaver, but one dog had the same score as a beaver andtwo dogs also had the same score.
Story
How many dogs took part in the competition?
(A) 2
(B) 3
(C) 6
(D) 7
Question
13
Part C
14
Connecting Beaver Dens
There are seven dens in a pond just off a shore as shown below. Dotted lines show where bridges canbe built. The numbers show how many trees are needed to build each possible bridge. A beaver needsto decide which bridges to build so that any den can be reached from the shore without swimming.
Story
What is the fewest number of trees needed to build the bridges?
(A) 12
(B) 13
(C) 17
(D) 18
Question
15
Robotic Car
Beavers have developed a robotic car. It has sensors that detect intersections. It produces the soundsshown below, when it is possible to turn left, right or both directions. The robotic car can go straightthrough an intersection (when possible), turn right (when possible) or turn left (when possible). Therobotic car cannot make U-turns and cannot reverse.
It automatically stops when it senses an obstacle in front of it.
Story
The car drives around the map shown below, starting at the indicated position. As it drives around themap, it produces the sounds Huiii Ding Huiii Dong, in that order.
At which location does the car stop?
(A) Location A
(B) Location B
(C) Location C
(D) Location D
Question
16
Fireworks
Two beavers live in lodges separated by a large forest. They decide to send messages to each other byshooting fireworks into the sky above the trees. Each message is a sequence of words, but the beaversonly know five words. They shoot two types of fireworks one after the other according to the followingcode:
Word Code
log
tree
rock
den
food
For example, to send the (strange) message “food, log, food”, a beaver would shoot:
Story
How many different meanings does the following sequence of fireworks have?
(A) 1
(B) 2
(C) 3
(D) 4
Question
17
Jumping Kangaroo
There are 10 plates in a row. There is one apple on each plate.Kangaroo Thomas loves to jump. First, he jumps onto the leftmost plate. On each single jump afterthis, he either jumps forward two plates, or backwards three plates. Thomas only jumps onto plateswith an apple. If he jumps onto a plate, he collects the apple from it, and therefore, can only jump oneach plate at most once.An example of the two possible jumps from one plate, labelled X, is shown with arrows in the picturebelow:
Story
If Thomas collects all 10 apples, which apple does he collect last?
(A) The rightmost apple
(B) The second apple from the right
(C) The third apple from the right
(D) The second apple from the left
Question
18
Beaver the Alchemist
Beaver the Alchemist can convert objects into other objects. He can convert:
• two clovers into a coin;
• a coin and two clovers into a ruby;
• a ruby and a clover into a crown;
• a coin, a ruby, and a crown into a kitten.
After objects have been converted to another object, they disappear.
Initially Beaver the Alchemist has lots of clovers, but no coins, rubies, crowns or kittens.
Story
How many clovers does Beaver the Alchemist need to create one kitten?
(A) 5
(B) 10
(C) 11
(D) 12
Question
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